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Three people killed after Typhoon Kajiki hits Vietnam

Climate change is driving more intense and unpredictable weather patterns, which can make destructive floods more likely
Climate change is driving more intense and unpredictable weather patterns, which can make destructive floods more likely

The death toll from Typhoon Kajiki has risen to three in Vietnam, as rescue workers battled uprooted trees and downed power lines and widespread flooding brought chaos to the streets of the capital Hanoi.

The typhoon hit central Vietnam yesterday with winds of up to 130km/h, tearing roofs off thousands of homes and knocking out power to more than 1.6 million people.

Authorities have said that three people had been killed and 13 injured, and warned of possible flash floods and landslides in eight provinces as Kajiki's torrential rains continue to wreak havoc.

On the streets of Vinh, in central Vietnam, AFP journalists saw soldiers and rescue workers using cutting equipment to clear dozens of trees and roof panels that had blocked the roads.

"A huge steel roof was blown down from the eighth floor of a building, landing right in the middle of the street," one resident said.

"It was so lucky that no one was hurt. This typhoon was absolutely terrifying."

Vietnam has long been affected by seasonal typhoons, but human-caused climate change is driving more intense and unpredictable weather patterns.

This can make destructive floods and storms more likely, particularly in the tropics.

"The wind yesterday night was so strong. The sound from trees twisting and the noise of the flying steel panels were all over the place," another Vinh resident told AFP.

"We are used to heavy rain and floods but I think I have never experienced that strong wind and its gust like this yesterday."

Flooding has cut off 27 villages in mountainous areas inland, authorities said, while more than 44,000 people were evacuated as the storm approached.

A man rides a motorbike past a fallen tree after Typhoon Kajiki passed through the Nghe An province in Vietnam

A corrugated iron roof lies on the middle of a road after Typhoon Kajiki passed through the Nghe An province in Vietnam

Chaos in Hanoi

Further north in Hanoi, the heavy rains left many streets under water, bringing traffic chaos this morning.

A Hanoi resident told AFP that he was stuck in one place for more than an hour, unable to escape the logjam of vehicles trapped by the murky brown waters.

"The flooding and the traffic this morning are terrible. It's a big mess everywhere," he said.

After hitting Vietnam and weakening to a tropical depression, Kajiki swept westwards over northern Laos, bringing intense rains.

After making landfall on Vietnam's north central coast yesterday, Kajiki has since weakened into a tropical depression as it moved across to Laos this morning, the national weather agency said.

The agency warned that rain will continue in several parts of northern Vietnam, with some areas likely to get up to 150mm in six hours, potentially causing flash floods and landslides.

The high-speed Laos-China railway has halted all services, and some roads have been cut, but there were no immediate reports of deaths.

In Vietnam, more than 100 people have been killed or left missing from natural disasters in the first seven months of 2025, according to the agriculture ministry.

In September last year Typhoon Yagi battered northern Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar, triggering floods and landslides that left more than 700 people dead and causing billions of dollars' worth of economic losses.

Accreditation: Reuters/AFP